Abstract

Combined Spitzer, Chandra, XMM-Newton, and VLA observations of the giant radio galaxy NGC 1316 (Fornax A) show a radio jet and X-ray cavities from AGN outbursts likely triggered by a merger with a late-type galaxy at least 0.4 Gyr ago. We detect a weak nucleus with an SED typical of a low-luminosity AGN with a bolometric luminosity of 2.4x10^42 erg/s. The Spitzer IRAC and MIPS images show dust emission strongest in regions with little or no radio emission. The large infrared luminosity relative to the galaxy's K-band luminosity implies an external origin for the dust. The dust mass implies that the merger spiral galaxy had a stellar mass of 1-6x10^10 M_sun and a gas mass of 2-4x10^9 M_sun. Chandra images show a small ~15"(1.6 kpc) cavity coincident with the radio jet, while the XMM-Newton image shows two large X-ray cavities lying 320"(34.8 kpc) east and west of the nucleus, each approximately 230"(25 kpc) in radius. The radio lobes lie at radii of 14.3'(93 kpc) and 15.6'(101 kcp), more distant from the nucleus than the detected X-ray cavities. The relative morphology of the large scale 1.4 GHz and X-ray emission suggests they were products of two distinct outbursts, an earlier one creating the radio lobes and a later one producing the X-ray cavities. Alternatively, if a single outburst created both the X-ray cavities and the radio lobes, this would require that the morphology is not fully defined by the 1.4 GHz emission. For the more likely two outburst scenario, we use the buoyancy rise times to estimate an age for the more recent outburst of 0.1 Gyr and use the associated PV work done by the expanding plasma to create the X-ray cavities to estimate the outburst's energy of 10^58 ergs. The present size and location of the large radio lobes implies that the AGN outburst that created them happened ~0.4 Gyr ago and released ~5x10^58 ergs. (abridged)

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